AICC general secretary Digvijaya Singh | PTI 
Nation

Parrikar has hijacked popular mandate in Goa: Digvijaya Singh

Singh said being the single largest party, the Congress had the "first right as well as the popular mandate" to form government.

From our online archive

PANAJI: On a day the BJP cobbled up a coalition to stake claim to form the next government in Goa under Manohar Parrikar, Congress leader Digvijaya Singh today accused the Defence Minister of "hijacking" the popular mandate.

"It is absolutely wrong on the part of the BJP to grab power when the mandate was given to the Congress by the voters (by virtue of being the single largest party)," AICC General Secretary Digvijaya Singh said.

The BJP has won only 13 seats in the 40-member House as the poll results threw a hung Assembly with the Congress emerging as the single largest party with 17 seats. In 2012Assembly polls the BJP had won 21 seats.

Singh said being the single largest party, the Congress had the "first right as well as the popular mandate" to form government, which has been "hijacked by Parrikar."

"Parrikar has brought down the morality of politics in the country. His act of indulging in horse-trading has affected the morale of Goan politicians," he said.

Stealing a march on the Congress, the BJP today staked claim to form the next government in Goa under his leadership, with the support of two Independents, three members each of the Goa Forward Party (GFP) and the Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party (MGP), and of the lone NCP member taking the tally of the coalition to 22.

The party members led by the Defence Minister called on Governor Mridula Sinha this evening to formally stake the claim to form government. 

Congress MP Shashi Tharoor's gunman, driver attacked in Malappuram; one held

Congress split on Iran stand as Sharma says politicisation is national disservice

TN CM Stalin slams Centre's three-language policy; calls it 'covert mechanism to impose Hindi'

US military aircraft hit in Iran war are first shot down by enemy fire in over 20 years

Naxalite-affected dists across India scaled down to two

SCROLL FOR NEXT